THE FILMWriter/Director Charles Burnett submitted his first feature, Killer of Sheep, as his thesis for his MFA in film at UCLA. The film was shot on location near his family's home in Watts in a series of weekends on a shoestring budget of less than $10,000, most of which was grant money.

With a mostly amateur cast (consisting of Burnett's friends and acquaintances), much handheld camera work, episodic narrative and gritty documentary-style cinematography, Killer of Sheep has been compared by film critics and scholars to Italian neorealist films like Vittorio De Sica's The Bicycle Thief and Roberto Rossellini's Paisan. However, Burnett cites Basil Wright's Songs of Ceylon and Night Mail and Jean Renoir's The Southerner as his main influences.

In 1981, Killer of Sheep received the Critic's Award at the Berlin International Film Festival. In 1990, the Library of Congress declared it a national treasure and placed it among the first 50 films entered in the National Film Registry for its historical significance. In 2002, the National Society of Film Critics selected the film as one of the 100 Essential Films of all time.

Despite these accolades, the film never saw popular distribution due to the expense and complication of the music rights (including songs by Etta James, Dinah Washington, Gershwin, Rachmaninov, Paul Robeson and Earth, Wind & Fire on the soundtrack) and in its rare viewings at festivals and museums it was shown on ragged 16mm prints. Now, thirty years later, the new 35mm print, restored by UCLA Film & Television Archive, is ready for its long-awaited theatrical release.

THE RESTORATION
UCLA has long been considered a leader in the preservation of classic
Hollywood cinema, but increasingly in recent years we've also been preserving the
very best of American independent cinema. At technical level Killer of Sheep
demanded immediate attention, as it was already deteriorating when we received the
material in 2000. The original 16mm A/B rolls as well as the magnetic
soundtrack master suffered from vinegar syndrome, putting the film on a ticking
clock.

Killer of Sheep had previously existed only in rough 16mm copies, and the
35mm blow-up restoration better renders the beautiful quality of Charles' lovely
in-the-street cinematography. One of the genuine privileges of doing this
work at UCLA is that we're able to apply the best technical resources in LA to a
small, low-budget production that would never otherwise benefit from such
treatment. But despite the access to high-end resources, we made great efforts to
preserve exactly the rough quality of the original, so as not to alter the
work. Especially careful attention was given to image contrast and tonality, to
carefully bring out the best aspects of the original negative. We're indebted
to Film Technology Company for their excellent lab work. We also, with the
help of John Polito of Audio Mechanics, conducted close and judicious work on
the "verite-like" soundtrack, which was often recorded by the many kids who
appear in the film.

--Ross Lipman, preservationist at UCLA Film & Television Archive, has been
responsible for the restoration of the films of John Cassavetes, John Sayles,
and Kenneth Anger. He is currently working on Word Is Out and The Exiles.

THE CAST

THE ACTOR, HENRY GAYLE SANDERSAfter serving for nine years in the US Army, including two tours in Vietnam, Sanders returned to this country in 1969 — reluctantly. His father had died during his "harrowing" tours and he was uncertain as to what to do with his life.

While injured in the service, he had written an autobiographical novel called What Love Has Joined Together, and he resolved to move to either New York or Los Angeles to try to sell it. In the end, he chose Los Angeles ("I figured if I was going to be broke, I might as well be broke and warm.") where he adapted his novel into a play. As part of his own "self-actualization" program, he studied cinema at Los Angeles City College and took related courses at UCLA under the G.I. Bill.

It is around this time that Sanders got into acting. "That's when I began to see where my strengths were," he says, "Ultimately all of these things gave me my center. And whatever trauma I may have gone through, everything comes to bear on my work in fruitful way." Sanders' long list of films and television credits includes the 2006 film Rocky Balboa, a recurring role on Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman, and guest appearances on Cagney and Lacey, Knots Landing, Perry Mason, Matlock, Murder She Wrote, ER, Miami Vice, NYPD Blue, The West Wing, and Joan of Arcadia. He lives in Los Angeles where he is currently directing a play about the Amistad trial entitled A Providential Occurrence.

THE ACTRESS, KAYCEE MOOREMoore had only acted in live theater before Killer of Sheep. Afterwards, she went on to star in Billy Woodbury's Bless Their Little Hearts (1984), which was written and shot by Charles Burnett. That year, she went back home to Kansas City, Missouri for a few months to help her mother start up the Kansas City chapter of the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America, and she ended up staying on, acting as Executive Director after her mother's death in 1990.

In 1991, filmmaker Julie Dash, wowed by Moore's performance in Killer of Sheep—particularly the improvised scene in which she is yelling at the characters Smoke and Scooter on the front porch—cast Moore in her 1991 film Daughters of the Dust. After filming, Moore returned to Kansas City to continue her work fighting Sickle Cell Disease. In 1994, she shared the screen with the likes of Isaac Hayes and Martin Sheen in a Kansas City independent film Ninth Street, adapted from a play of the same name. She continues to work at the Kansas City SCDAA as a grant writer and has finished a screenplay entitled Track 14, a historical drama about the Kansas City area.

THE CONTEXTClyde Taylor of New York University coined the phrase, "The L.A. Rebellion" as a term to refer to the group of young black politically-minded artists trading ideas and labor at the UCLA Film School in the 70's. Though Charles Burnett has insisted in several interviews that he and his fellow filmmakers did not in fact consider themselves part of a "rebellion" or "movement" as such, and that it was merely a radical time in American history, he describes the atmosphere at UCLA as one of comradery in radical thought. He called UCLA an "anti-Hollywood" environment with a "kind of anarchistic flavor to it" in which one "had to come up with something relevant or extremely well done, original."

Other directors at UCLA at this time were Julie Dash (Daughters of the Dust, 1991), Haile Gerima (Sankofa, 1993), Billy Woodbury (Bless Their Little Hearts, 1984), and Larry Clark (Passing Through, 1977). Burnett himself was the cinematographer for Gerima's Bush Mama (1979), worked crew and camera and edited Dash's Illusions (1982) and wrote the script and shot Woodbury's Bless Their Little Hearts. Another notable figure is UCLA professor Elyseo Taylor, who started the school's Ethno-Communications department, a program focused on the study and production of films by people of color.

Many of the films that were being made at the time by this peer group have been compared by film critics and scholars to Italian neorealist films of the 40's, the Third World cinema of the 60's and 70's, and the Iranian New Wave of the 90's. A major thematic thread that runs through many of the films is a critical response to White Hollywood and Blaxploitation. "We needed the spectrum," says Burnett, "the full range of the black experience."

"Killer of Sheep is one of the most striking debuts in movie history and an acknowledged landmark in African-American film."— TERRENCE RAFFERTY, GQ

"Killer of Sheep represents the highest example of contemporary black American life put on screen because of Burnett's integrity to view it purely, without typical corrupted Hollywood devices."— ARMOND WHITE, FILM COMMENT